Plattsmouth weekly journal. (Plattsmouth, Neb.) 1881-1901, July 25, 1895, Image 8

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    PERSONAL, POLITICAL AND PERTINENT
Now that a good crop of small grain
has been secured to the farmers o
Cass county, and the corn crop is
almost assured there is hardly a good
reason why they cannot pay their ac
counts with the printer. There are
several hundred farmers in Cass county
who are in arrears for the Weekly
and they could, one and all, very easily
help us out of a hole, and a little help
from each one would work wonders.
Acorn crop of 2,400,000,000 bushels
is now being figured on. This is 200,
000,000 or 300,000,000 larger than the
greatest vield of the past. All the
other cereals will average with corn
and some of them above the average,
while cotton promises to go up near
the highest mark ever touched except
in one or two years. Nearly every
element necessary to the country is
being provided this year.
"Plattsmouth has a young lady who
has gone insane over bicycling. It
takes very little to turn the head of
the average person in Plattsmouth."
Nebraska City News. Considering
the source, comment is unnecessary.
An electrical paper suggests that
good brakes are more necessary to
street cars than the fenders about
which so much is being said. The in
ventors have devised power brakes by
which the motorman, with a slight
movement of the hand can almost im
mediately stop cars at a high rate of
speed; but the companies do not adopt
them, it is said, because they are more
expensive than the feeble and un
certain ones now in use.
Darwin, the great naturalist, is
authority forthe statement that earth
worms possess the remarkable faculty
of reproducing a head or a tail in case
an accident occurs to either end. If
one be cut in two at the middle tie
tail will immediately set about repair
ing damages and growing a new head.
The head end is also equal to the emer
gency, and within a surprisingly brief
period of time grows a tail of its own.
One of the singular things in college
is the fact that a professor will lecture
for an hour and seem deeply absorbed
in his subject and the next time he
meets his class he requires them to tell
him what he has been talking about.
Princeton Tiger.
Concerning the discussion as to
"What Constitutes Male Attire," it
does not appear, from a review of the
bicycle arena, that there is any dis
tinctively male attire left.
Several thousand anxious American
sportsmen are hoping that the De
fender will give the British a harder
rub than the Cornell oaismen did.
. The various Nebraska roads have
begun providing the box cars with
grain doors in anticipation of the big
shipments of grain. These doors are
necessary in the boxcar to prevent the
grain from spilling out. This is the
first time in three years that it has
been necessary to provide the doors,
and is a straw which shows which way
the wind is blowing. It means that
the roads realize that the box cars are
going to be at a premium and that
every car will be loaded to its full
capacity. The roads are also calling
in the scattered cars and are getting
them home for use when the shipment
of grain begins. Nebraska City News.
"Three minutes for dinner!" yelled
the railroad porter. "Good!" ex
claimed the editor. "The last time it
was three dollars."
Stevenson's pity was a very marked
quality, and it extended to beggars,
which is, I think, to go too far. His
optimism, however, suffered a rude
shock In South Audley street one sum
mer afternoon. We met a stalwart
beggar, whom I refused to aid. Louis,
however, wavered aud finally handed
him sixpence. The man pocketed the
coin, forbore to thank his benefactor,
but, fixinghis eye on me, said in a loud
voice: "And what is the other little
gentleman going to give me? " "In
future," said Louis, as we strode
coldly on, "I shall be 'the other little
gentleman.' "Edmund Gosse,in the
Century.
Gov. Holcomb has instructed the
county attorney of Douglas county to
report on the alleged assault of the
McCarty gang on a family of emi
grants named Dawson, who are Brit
ish subjects. The sheriff reported
that both sides were equally to blame
in the matter. British authorities
have asked the secretary of state at
Washington for further particulars.
When a man goes into a store and
thickly asks the clerk for a pound of
paralyzed coffee when pulverized coffee
is what he wants, there is some reason
to suspect that be is partly paralyzed
himself.
Lincoln must have a surplus of can
didates for office, judging from the
following by Col. Bixby: "A man
was discovered on the streets yester
day who showed by his looks of abso
lute unconcern that he- was not a can
didate for office, and the police threat
ened to run him in as a suspicious
character."
An Ohio professor is advocating a
painless death for condemned mur-J
derers by the use of carbonic acid gas
in place of electricity. The victim
would simply say good-night, as usual,
after an order to be called at six
o'clock, and at six o'clock would be
elsewhere, without an idea of bow he
came there. The scheme has its ad
vantages in minimizing the horrible.
New York Mail and Kxpress.
A summer girl at Bar Harbor is de
scribed as being "attired in a very
smart little coat and a veiy clever lit
tle hat." Two airy altogether.
The Dick Frampton mentioned in
the following, from the Council Bluffs
department of this morning's World
flerald, is a former resident of this
eitv: "Rosa Brown, a mulatto woman.
was arrested Monday night charged
with vagrancy. She was found with
a colored man, Dick Frampton. When
brought into court the next morning
she was given a sentence of $3 and
costs, which was suspended on her
promise to leave the city."
Victor Hainer, a brother of Con
gressman Ilainer, has been missing
for the past three weeks from near
Cripple Creek, Colo., and as he had
considerable money about him when
last seen it is believed he was mur
dered for his money.
OOLDIU'O SLANDKKS.
Every advocate of unlimited silver
coinage at the ratio, of 10 to 1 pro
claims his belief in the inherent power
of the government to give value "to
anything that bears its stamp and is
leclared a legal tender for the paj ment
of debt. Omaha Bee.
There is nobody would seriously dis
pute that statement not even the Bee
editor. He believes in the greenback
and takes it unquestioned in payment
of debt. The sentence which follaws,
however, is as mean as it is untrue.
"The logic of this article of faith is
not merely that 50 cents worth of any
metal can be converted into coin valued
at 100 cents by the action of tli mint,
but that any article or commodity with
little or no value, may be coined or
stamped into dollars of equal value
with gold and silver dollars."
This is rank falsehood. The free
coinage people do believe, however,
that it was the taking away of the full
egal tender quality and free mintage
of silver and leaving it on gold that has
ncreased the value of the gold coin
ibove the silver. Silver is a metal of
imited quantity. There is not too
much of it in the world to plnce it
within the power of government to coin
ill that is or might be offered at the
ratio of 16 to 1 to the common good of
ltimanity. Will the Bee deny that it
s tl e common use of gold as money.
backed as it is by the lawful tender
quality, that gives it its present stable
value. The supreme court of the
United States has decided that the
egal tender quality given the green
back made it as good as gold in the
payment of debts. Dare the Bee con-
rovert the law V
Tde people of Nebraska have had
an object lesson during the past two
years in proof of the fact that nearly
all prosperity depends on the farmer.
When the tiller of the soil gets a good
return for his labor in the form of a
arge crop, the wheels of all other in-
lustries are set in motion, and labor of
every kind is employed. The railway
magnate might have thought him
self independent of the farmer, but
the experience of the past two years
las convinced him of his error. Even
he speculator and banker is looking
over the waving fields of growing corn
and chinks his coin in hopeful anticipa-
ion of enhanced speculations and con-
fquent in loans at usury. The work-
ngman sees in a big crop better
chances for labor and all men are
made happier by the bounty of provi
dence and the work of the farmer.
The United States has, or is sup
posed to have, $500,000,000 in silver
and $411,000,000 in gold in circulation,
while France has $800,000,000 in gold
and 8700,000,000 in silver. The silver
n the United States is practically
kept at par by pledging its payment in
gold. In France the silver is kept at
par by the action of the government in
paying out silver when coin is asked
for in redemption of bank notes just
as Uncle Sam could do if he would.
The per capita of all money in circu-
ation in the United States is about
23. In France it is over 40.
V -
The new yacht. Defender, built to
defend the American cup against the
British yacht Valkyrie III, recently
completed for Lord Dunraveu. has
shown herself to be the superior of the
Vigilant, in both rough and ' smooth
water that is, with a strong and light
wind. By all accounts she is a flyer.
For years the Americans have de
fended the cup and it now seems that
they will be likely to keep it.
The Nebraska City News is re
quested to join the regular democracy.
Sulking and bolting when fairly beaten
don't compart with the usual conduct
of the News men. If they will come
in out of the wet it is safe to say they
will feel far better, besides enjoying
the luxury of being welcomed by the
killing of the fatted calf.
. Settleks on the Otoe reservation
lauds will shortly be brought up stand
ing if they don't pay up. They have
had ten years in which to pay for their
lands, which they bought with the ex
pectatiou of paying in two years, and
now they complain about the severity
of their lot. Such is human nature !
NKItltASKA ITKMS.
New potatoes are selling at 30 cents
a bushel in Kearney.
Hitchcock county warrants are
worth 1)6 cents on. the dollar.
The water plant at Sidney is owned
by the Union Pacific Railway com
pany .
The pops of Greeley county will hold
their convention and begin a campaign
of education today.
Nebraska takes the cake on crops
this year and Wayne county is in the
centre of the cake, coated with sugar
beets. See? Wayne Herald.
Two new irrigation ditches have
been formed at Gothenbrug, under the
new state law, one the Gothenburg
South Side district, comprising lW.OOO
acres, and the other the Lincoln and
Dawson county district, comprising
300,000 acres.
Editor Gerrard of th Momoe Look
ing (J lass is trying to purify the moral
atmosphere of Columbus ami Platte
Center, and the Signal editor of the
latter place wickedly recommends
that he ought to shovel the shavings
out if his own carpenter shop.
Joseph Johnson, an old settler of
Madison county, was recently found
dead in bed. He had worked hard the
day before in the hot sun aud was
overheated. Mr. Johnson was fifty
years of age and leaves a wife and
seven children in rather poor circum
stances. No matter how much trouble you
haye and how many of your friends
desert you, says t he Scribner Hustler,
no matter if the clouds of distress and
grief are so black that no silver lining
is visible, there is always one place
where you can find sympathy, and
that place is in the dictionary.
A lone woman, says the Harrisburg
News, drove a prairie schooner into
town and camped on the east commons
Tuesday night. Hailing from Idaho,
she had come through the wilds of
Wyoming unmolested and nothing
daunted with the lonesomeness and
hardships of the long joifrney. had
fixed her destination as Ohio.' If the
new woman is not a myth perhaps
this is she.
Doe Your It i rath Com
in Duchess Trousers?
Many get theirs that way.
C. E. Wescott & Son in sales have
passed the line of 4,000 pairs of Duchess
Trousers.
Everybody happy in Duchess Trous
ers. C. E. Wescott & Son sells them,
and everyone who tries them is sure
to buy nonk other.
What is home without The Daily
JouknalV
A Kirk From "Lover of .Jili- "
Editou Jo u una I.: The parliamen
tary drill was not'without its good in
fluence. How does lite council ex
punge from its records the record of
the previous meeting, when it cannot
legally be done if one member objects,
whereas there were four. Or does the
city council pose before their constitu
ents as a body which utterly disre
gards one part of the people and stops
at nothing to gain the desires of the
other side.
Love it ok Jus-tic is
For a clean, cool, sweet smoke Flor
de Pepperberg, Buds and Bock'y are
superior to any other brands of cigars
in this western country.
J. Pepper, be kg, Mf'r.
List of Lelttm
Remaining unclaimed in the postoffice
at Plattsmouth, Nebraska, July 24,
1895:
Berge, J W Clary. V F
Sharp, FE Stobbe, Joe.
Persons calling for any.of the above
letters or parcels will please say "ad
vertised." W. K. Fox, P. M.
If the rain falls upon the just as
well as upon the unjust, why in thun
der, asks the Tribune, does it not rain
in Fremont?
Money to Utnn
On farming lands. Low rates, long
times. No delay in securing loans.
Inquire at First National bank. 7
Leave your orders for job work with
Thk Journal, an artistic job guaranteed.
TI1K NEWSBOY'S STOKY OF THE CROSS.
NOTE r.Tbe newsboy aud hiB companions
are housed in an empty hogshead and they lis
ten with eager attention while he repeats to
them the wonderful btory he has heard at the
Mission Sunday school. He tells It in the only
language he can command, or they can under
stand, which Is the language of the gutter.
Author.
Onct they was a feUer, what lived.
Way back In them ole fashioned daye.
Whatever ye done, he forgived,
My Sunday school teacher, she says.
She says that a ole widder's son
Jest turned up his trotters one day.
An' when the folks seed he was done,
They s'arted ter plant him away.
An' when they got part o' the way,
'I he Savior, ho happened along,
Ef you hed a bin there,' hays they,
'They would u"t a bin nothing wrong.'
An' he were as cool as could be
An' he walked right up the bier
Took hole of his hand an, says he,
Young feller, git up an' come here.
An' he got right up on his pins
An' moseyed along wltn ther rent.
An' took the rags otX of his fins,
An' praised, an' give thanks, like iersesFed.
Then Jesus was wa'.kln' one nay,
Along by the Bide of a sen.
He see a boat com In' that way,
A-rockln' as bad as could be.
An' then he beerd somebody t-hout.
A begnin' o' him fer ter save,
An' so he Jes' started right out.
An walked up ter them, on ther wave.
He says to ther waters be st'H.'
An' they was us still as could be,
Ther waves shell all bow ter my will.
Fer lam ther Master, says he.
He opened the eves o' the blind.
An' he raised up a gal from the dtad !
An' lots a nr re things o' that kind,
My Siinday-schooi teacher uid.
It got to be so that a crowd,
Jes' followed wherever he went.
He didn't git haughty er proud,
Ner he didn't charge 'em a cent.
But some fellers called blm a fake
An made lots o trouble an' fuss.
An' they ottered Judas a stake
lie took it the mean, sneak In', cuss!
An' when he was gone out ter pray.
He put ther perllce on ter him,
They took him an' dragged him away,
An' Pilate he humored their whim.
A whole lot o' blokes took him up,
An' fastened him on to a tree.
An made him drink out o' a cup.
That was bitter as bitter could be '.
An' made a big hole in bis side
It was mostly as big as my head,
So afier a while he jes' cried.
An' give up ther (ihost, au was dead.
An' Mary, his mother, was there.
A wHitin' till they took Lint down,
she wired off the blood with her hair,
An' took off the thorny ole crown.
Thy put him away in ther ground.
An rolled a rock up ter ther door,
An' stood up som soldiers aroun.
An thought that they had him then, shore.
He stayed there a couple o' days.
An then he irot up au cone out.
An' some o' ther fellers, she says,
They met lm a walkln' (.bout.
lie showed 'em the hole in his side.
The print o the nails In his ban's.
An then they no longer denied,
hut tried tei obey h's comman's.
An one day he spread out his wings.
An sailed right away to ther sky,
An' we. to ther Sunday school sings.
We'll meet liim atrain by am by.
He msde up a passel o' laws,
An' left 'em all down here fer us,
lie saysye kalnt kill fer no cause,
Er swindle' er lie, bo s. er ens.
But always be good as ye can.
An walk in ther narrerest way.
An try ter live up ter the plan,
Au read in er bible an pray.
An then If ye hapeu ter croak,
Ve'll g'j up ter Heaven ter live.
Where ye'll never be cold, kids, er brute.
An' all of r sins he'll ferglve!
sh says, ye can enter thar yet.
An' put on a garment o white.
An' I'm goln' ter get thare, you bet !
An set with ther sheep on ther right!
Isabel kit hey.
PRRSnWAT. AMH nTTTP.RWTHP
ur. jviarsnaii, trraduaio uiunr-
Jti, 1'itzgerald block.
Hen McGivim of Omalia is visiting I
old friends in this citv.
,.... I
11.111 ttuiiiiiK. iii-sirnciui or uues,
1 odd block. Uuarnntfea accuracy of
all Ins work. lOtf. I
L. P. Knrges of Avoea, Iowa, a for-
ii.tr lesi.tent of I his city whs in the
i x I . . . I
..,J ... ............ .,rU ..mC
leiuay morning. 1
Religions services are being con-1
dueled every night this week at the
Smith Prk Ih.ntist nimirii i.v T?v a
Post. Everyone inviN d.
1 v ......
toou auery . sr.. 01 me preemci nas
hetrunwork with his new Case thresher
siml is delighted with its work. He I
says the small main crop i fair and
!.. xvi idui. t ,
IIU Mill IV uw. 1
I
A team of mules hitched to a lumber
wagon, belonging to A. Ji. Todd, took
a notion to ruu away yesterday aftei- J
noon and went teHrintrup Main street,
breaking Geo. Vass' sign pole in sev-
eral pieces before they were stopped.
wtu. siamer, or .uiDeriy precinct,
was in town Saturday paying his taxes.
His fall wheat 1ms been threshed and
it turned out over twelve bushels per
acre-far better than he had expected.
ir hvnrA Vrldav h nui.l Mint, spvah
cents was offered for new oats at Ne
braska City a good price for these
gold standard times.
Sheriff Eikenbary of Cass county
brought lena IMoeger to the insane
asylum yesterday. This is the girl
who went crazy after seeing the bicy
ole raoes last week at I'lattsmouth.
On the train coming to Lincoln she
waved her handkerchief at imaginary
"crack-a-jacks" a good part of the
time. Lincoln Journal.
A CHEERFUL &IVER.
NOVELIST HOWELLS DESCRIBES HIS
TRI3ULATIONS.
A Maimed Beggar, a Solitary Half Dollar
and the Contest Between Two Con
sciences Unsettled A Usually Calm Mind,
but a Compromise Was Arranged.
Mr. W. D. Howells has written for
The Century two papers entitled. "Trib
ulations of a Cheerful Giver," giving
his experiences with the begging frater
nity. The following is taken from the
first paper :
Some months ago, as I was passing
through a down town street on my way
to the elevated station, I saw a man
Bitting on the steps of a house. He
seemed to be resting his elbows on his
knees and holding out both his hands.
As I came nearer I perceived that he
had no hands, but only stumps, where
the fingers had been cut oft close to the
palms, and that it was these stumps hj
was holding out in the mute appea7
which was hie form of begging. Other
wise he did not ask charity. When I ap
proached him he did not look up, and
when I stopped in front of him ho did
not speak. I thought this rather fine in
its -way; except for his mutilation,
which the man really could not help,
there was nothing to offend the taste,
and his immobile silence was certainly
impressive.
I decided at once to give him some
thing, for when I am in the presence of
want or even the appearance of want,
there is something that says to me,
"Give to him that asketh," and I have
to give or else go away with a bad con
science a thing I hate. Of course I do
not give much, for I wish to be a good
oitizen as well as a good Christian, and
as soon as I obey that voice which I can
not disobey I hear another voice re
proaching me for encouraging street
beggary. I have been taught that street
beggary is wrong, and when I have to
unbutton two coats and go through three
or four pockets before I can reach the
small coin I mean to give in compli
ance with that imperative voice, I cer
tainly feel it to be -wrong. So I compro
mise, and I am never able to make sure
that either of those voices is satisfied
with me. I am not even satisfied with
myself, but I am better satisfied than if
I gave nothing. That was the selfish
reason I now had for deciding to yield
to my better nature and to obey the
voice which bade me "Give to him that
asketh, " for, as I said, I hate a bad con
science, and of . two bad consciences I
always choose the least, which, in a
case like this, is the one that incensed
political economy gives me.
I put my hand into my hip pocket,
where I keep my silver, and found noth-
a-ixxaui,
cnangea me wnoie current oi my ieei-
ings, and It Was not Chill penury that
repressed my noble rage, but chill afflu-
ence. It was manifestly wrong to give
half a dollar to a man who had no
hands or to any sort of beggar. I was
willing to commit a small act of inci-
vism, but I had not the courage to flout
political economy o the extent of 50
cents, and I felt that when I was bid-
, .m- t 1 1 At , T
J-; - "
never meant to give so much as a half
dollar, but a cent, or a half dime, or at
the most a quarter. I wished I had a
quarter. I would gladly have given a
quarter, but there was nothing in my
pocket but that fatal, that inexorably
indivisible half dollar, the Continent of
twn nnartprs. hnt. not nrnprifjillv a nnnr-
tor T tennlrl harn ncL-ot nnrllv i,,
sight to change it for me, but there was
no one passing ; it was a quiet street of
brownstone dwellings, and not a
thronged thoroughfare at any time. At
that hour of the late afternoon it was
deserted, except for the beggar and my
self, and I am not sure that he had any
business to be sitting there on the steps
of another man's house, or that I had
the right to encourage his invasion by
giving him anything. For a moment I
uiu. nub hiiuw quiiu vnub iu uo. iu ue
RTirft. I wjis not honnrl tr trm man in
Unvwav. He had not asked me for char
Mry. and I had barely paused before
him. I could go on and ignore the in-
ciaenc x inougnt or aoing mis, one
then I thought or the bad conscience 1
should be certain to have, and I could
not go on. I glanced across the street,
and near the corner I saw a decent look-
m& restaurant, and "Wait a minute," I
lu Tr m w f
AWAIT. C4JLIU -ft. ilUI UUi VOO fcl frU Uil
. .. , nl.al,0J .L. tonranf
r WRS nnw rmifA rponlv1 tn iriva him
a quarter, and be done with it; the
thing was getting to be a bore. Hut
when I entered the restaurant I saw no
, A . . .
one uiere out; a-young man quu uw txi
I ena 01 a long room, ana wnen no nau
COme all the way forward to find what
I wanted I was ashamed to ask him to
change my half dollar, and I pretended
that 1 wanted a package 01 aweet a-
porai cigarettes, whicn i cua not, vani,
T 1 ? 1 A. A.
. j.
and whinh it -was a Toure waste for me
to buy, since I do not smoke, though
doubtless it was better to buy them and
encourage commerce than to give the
half dollar and encourage beggary. At
any rate, I instinctively felt that I had
pouucai economy
to the man on the steps and secure my-
Beif with Christian charity too. On the
way over to him, however, I decided
that I would not give him a quarter, and
I ended by poising 15 cents on one of
I a .1.1 A.
his outstretcuea slumps.
Lepero In the World.
According to Mulhall, leprosy is far
more prevalent in Europe than most
people suppose. He says that there are
now 8,000 lepers in Portugal, 1,770 in
Norway, 6,000 in Russia and about
9,000 all told in other European coun
tries. In India there are 131,000 and in
Canton, China, not less than 10,000.
He does not give figures for other coun
tries and islands, but it is estimated
that the leper population of the world
is but little, if any, short of 1,000,000.
5
The Glass Trust
HAS ADVANCED THE TIUCE
OF ULASS
BUT WE ARE SELLING WINDOW
GLASS AT THE SAME OLD PRICES.
Woodman's Raw Linseed Oil at 62c
a gallon.
Woodman's Boiled Linseed Oil at
ttoc a gallon.
West Virginia Black Oil, for Farm
Machinery, at l a gallon.
Oasoline at ltio per gallon.
WE SELL ONLY THE VERY BEST.
YOURS
OKEIESHSTCr 5S CO.,
PLATTSMOUTH, NEB.
The Work of the Heart.
One of the most remarkable things
about the heart is the amount of wor&
it does. Considering the organ as A
pump whose task is to deliver a known
quantity of blood against a .knqwi
"head," it is easy to show that ill 4
hours a man's heart does about 124 foot
tons of work. "In other words, " says a
contemporary, "if the whole force ex
pended by the heart in 24 hours were
gathered into one huge stroke, such a
power would lift 124 tons one foot from
the ground. A similar calculation has
been made respecting the amount of
work expended by the muscles involved!
In breathing. In 24 hours these muscles
do about 21 foot tons of work. "
A Mob.
A mob is usually a creature of very
mysterious existence, particularly in a
large city. Where it comes from or
whither it goes few men can telL As
sembling and dispersing with equal sucf- -denness,
it is as diflicult to follow to
its various sources as the sea itself, nor
does the parallel stop here, for the ocean
is not more fickle and uncertain, more
terrible when aroused, more unreason
able or more cruel. Dickens.
Light on a Hark Subject.
Rivers Supposing it to be true that
Luther did throw an ink bottle at satan,
why do you think he did it?
Banks I presume he wanted to see if
ne couldn't make him blacker than he
vas tw'nted. Chicago Tribune.
K'.'M'Oi!) xniE tarij-:.
H . Ji ax. K. Tt.
KAST HOUND.
N-n 2f dally firifi, p. ra.
. 4, daily i0:2y. a. m.
j So. 10, from Schuyler except Sun-lay. 11:55, a.m.
f "o. 12, daily except Sunday
. ..8:25. p. m.
12:2:1. p. m.
. ..2:50, p. m
. ..3:-13, p. EC.
...9:15, u. m.
...2:12. p. m.
N'- sa. daily except sund.iy
N'o. 3D, freight from Louisville..
' WKST HOUND,
No. 3. dally
.'o. 5, daily
f 4 ' rrtSl mAU' oa,iy
j lo,s '". exee, ' tt'.da
No. 11 , daily
1 .N'o. 7, fast mail, daily
y 2:-ti. p. m.
. . 4 :i0. p. m.
. .7:15. a.m.
. .2:'.'0, p.m.
So. 91, daily except Sundav.
1 so. e. freight to Louisville
' T
m
I". K.
Leaves.
. ...4:50a.m.
goinu nortii:
rasenger. No. 1...
No. im
5:03 p. in
: -'reiRht, No. 127 dai!y exe'pt Sunday) 3:3; p. m
t I'OIXG SOI Til:
I t.-uKrr, .o.
1q:43 p. m.
No. 1U4 11:52 a. m.
frekht, No, 12rt (dally except Snnd a v)10:05 a.m
Forthe Campaign.
The Omaha
"Weekly
Bees,
Will be n?nt to any address in
this country or i'anada from
now to ...
December 31, 1895
25 CENTS.
Send o'ders at once to . . .
The Omaha Bee,
Oimiha. Neb.
r
F. C. FRICKE & CO.,
Will keep constantly on hand a full and
complete stock of pure
mu m ma
PAINTS, OILS, Etc.
m
Also a full line of I rugrgira SuudrUa.
Pure liquors for medicinal purposes.
Special atteution given to
COMPOUNDING PRESCRIPTIONS.
Messrs. F O. FRICKE CU. ,c the
only parties selling our Alaska Crystal
Itrilliant
COMBINATION
Spectacles and tye-Glasses
In Plattsniouth. These Lenses are far
mperiorto any otier sold in tt is city
possessing a natural transparency and'
etrengthing qualities which will ore
serving the failing eye sight.
PROF. STRASSMAX.
H. O. LIVINGSTON,
ATTORNEY AT lW,
- -4
INSURANCE.
Plattarooitta, , Seora8
V
i
x
V
.-;
'if.